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U.S. Surgeon General Jerome Adams is getting frustrated with those Americans who still aren’t practicing social distancing amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Adams spoke toFox News on Tuesday morning after President Trump extended the federal government’s social distancing guidelines until the end of April. Once again encouraging Americans to stay home and keep their distance from others, Adams decried reports of some not taking these warnings to heart.

“I’m a little bit frustrated, because you’re still seeing pictures on Twitter, on TV, of people getting together, being too close, putting themselves in a situation where they could end up in the hospital,” he said.

While Adams didn’t cite specific examples, images emerged on Monday of a crowd of people in Manhattan gathering to look at the USNS Comfort hospital ship. The New York Post reports that “NYPD warned the crowds about violating social distancing, but did not issue any tickets.”

However, Adams said “we really hope and expect” that people will listen to the administration’s guidelines, and “the way we solve this problem is by everyone coming together” to stop the spread of the coronavirus.

This comes after Dr. Deborah Birx, the White House coronavirus task force’s response coordinator, said Monday the U.S. could be facing between 100,000 and 200,000 deaths from COVID-19 even if “we do things together well, almost perfectly.” But she added that the administration isn’t sure “that all of America is responding in a uniform way to protect one another, so we also have to factor that in.”